Author
Topic: Using the stall for disabled people (Read 50189 times)

Today, I was at Costco. As I came out of the stall for disabled people, I was told by a woman who was at the sink area that "You don't have a disability! You shouldn't use that stall!" I just looked at her and said, "What an interesting assumption."

She asked what I meant by that. I said, "You made an assumption about my health and I said it was an interesting one."

Next she asked me why I needed to use the stall and I told her that if she wasn't my doctor, I wasn't discussing my health with her.

I'm not convinced that using this stall is rude, if there is no one disable waiting for it. I see no reason to leave this empty just in case a disabled person comes in. It's not like a parking space, it should be free in a few minutes.

I frequently use the handicap stall just because I want the extra room, especialy if my grandaughter is with me.

I'm not convinced that using this stall is rude, if there is no one disable waiting for it. I see no reason to leave this empty just in case a disabled person comes in. It's not like a parking space, it should be free in a few minutes.

I frequently use the handicap stall just because I want the extra room, especialy if my grandaughter is with me.

The only time that's a problem is when a parent decides she needs to use it to help her children change clothes after swimming.

I rarely opt for the handicapped stall, but given the gymnastics required to get into some stalls (where the door opens only in, and hits the toilet seat, and the "free" wall has the tissue dispenser in it) - I swear, architects hate women, and I sometimes loathe the profession - I sometimes will. I've gone back and forth regarding whether I "should" use that stall since I don't "need" it, but I generally figure the line needs to be cleared out, too.

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• Finally we shall place the Sun himself at the center of the Universe.

I'm not convinced that using this stall is rude, if there is no one disable waiting for it. I see no reason to leave this empty just in case a disabled person comes in. It's not like a parking space, it should be free in a few minutes.

I frequently use the handicap stall just because I want the extra room, especialy if my grandaughter is with me.

The only time that's a problem is when a parent decides she needs to use it to help her children change clothes after swimming.

I rarely opt for the handicapped stall, but given the gymnastics required to get into some stalls (where the door opens only in, and hits the toilet seat, and the "free" wall has the tissue dispenser in it) - I swear, architects hate women, and I sometimes loathe the profession - I sometimes will. I've gone back and forth regarding whether I "should" use that stall since I don't "need" it, but I generally figure the line needs to be cleared out, too.

If it's not in use and no one in line is specifically waiting for it, I think it should be used. It is a toilet stall that has been modified to make it easier to fit a wheelchair into; that does not stop it from being a toilet stall.

OP here, blushing and thanking all of you for such kind words. (I too think that anyone can use them, that those who truly can not use the other stalls should be given perference. Although, I always wait because I can wait.)

I'm not convinced that using this stall is rude, if there is no one disable waiting for it. I see no reason to leave this empty just in case a disabled person comes in. It's not like a parking space, it should be free in a few minutes.

I frequently use the handicap stall just because I want the extra room, especialy if my grandaughter is with me.

The only time that's a problem is when a parent decides she needs to use it to help her children change clothes after swimming.

I rarely opt for the handicapped stall, but given the gymnastics required to get into some stalls (where the door opens only in, and hits the toilet seat, and the "free" wall has the tissue dispenser in it) - I swear, architects hate women, and I sometimes loathe the profession - I sometimes will. I've gone back and forth regarding whether I "should" use that stall since I don't "need" it, but I generally figure the line needs to be cleared out, too.

The (brand new!) building at our university has tiny stalls. The toilet takes up half the length of the space and almost all the width, the toilet paper dispenser sticks out, and then they stuck in huge feminine product disposal boxes that are wedged between toilet and stall wall. If you are sitting on the toilet (which is also small), you end up partially sitting on the box.

Yes, I use the handicap stall.

There are numerous other problems with this building, but it actually won an award for design.

Those stalls are "accessible," not "exclusive." If no one else needs it, there's no reason why someone shouldn't use it. Or that whoever uses it doesn't need it in some way you can't immediately and visibly discern, as OP showed!

I'm not convinced that using this stall is rude, if there is no one disable waiting for it. I see no reason to leave this empty just in case a disabled person comes in. It's not like a parking space, it should be free in a few minutes.

I frequently use the handicap stall just because I want the extra room, especialy if my grandaughter is with me.

The only time that's a problem is when a parent decides she needs to use it to help her children change clothes after swimming.

I rarely opt for the handicapped stall, but given the gymnastics required to get into some stalls (where the door opens only in, and hits the toilet seat, and the "free" wall has the tissue dispenser in it) - I swear, architects hate women, and I sometimes loathe the profession - I sometimes will. I've gone back and forth regarding whether I "should" use that stall since I don't "need" it, but I generally figure the line needs to be cleared out, too.

The (brand new!) building at our university has tiny stalls. The toilet takes up half the length of the space and almost all the width, the toilet paper dispenser sticks out, and then they stuck in huge feminine product disposal boxes that are wedged between toilet and stall wall. If you are sitting on the toilet (which is also small), you end up partially sitting on the box.

Yes, I use the handicap stall.

There are numerous other problems with this building, but it actually won an award for design.

Frank Lloyd Wright was considered an architect-genius, but yet was known to design houses without bathrooms or kitchens. Yeah, I know.

I frequently use the disable accessible stalls. Never had had a comment made about it. Why do people feel the need to make such comments, I wonder.

There are numerous other problems with this building, but it actually won an award for design.

Tom Wolfe's From Bauhaus to Our House finally explained to me what architects are trying to do when they design buildings these days.

Hint: It's not creating a pleasant living space.

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My cousin's memoir of love and loneliness while raising a child with multiple disabilities will be out on Amazon soon! Know the Night, by Maria Mutch, has been called "full of hope, light, and companionship for surviving the small hours of the night."